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  1. Carried out under Sir Arthur Tedder, it was hailed by the press as Tedder's bomb-carpet (or Tedder's carpet). The bombing was concentrated in a four by three-mile area, preparing the way for the First Army . [ 22 ]

  2. Jun 19, 2018 · In that latter role, the Baltimores helped perfect RAF Air Marshal Arthur Tedder’s concept of tactical carpet bombing. Nicknamed the “Tedder Bomb Carpet,” this tactic involved a six-aircraft formation called a “box.”

  3. Mar 9, 2017 · Nicknamed the “Tedder Bomb Carpet,” this tactic involved a six-aircraft formation called abox.” Three boxes were formed into V-formations, or “vics.” Two waves, each containing one vic, or 18 aircraft, would attack in succession from heights of 10,000 to 12,000 feet.

  4. From it sprang the “Tedder carpet” pattern bombing that helped to blast the Axis out of North Africa. As Deputy Supreme Allied Commander he was responsible for the Anglo-American air operations against Germany; and it was he who conceived the tank-busting Hurricanes which he named “can-openers”.

  5. Was the US Army Air Forces' equivalent of the RAF's area bombing, except that aircraft dropped their bombs in a uniform pattern over the target area. For the technique known as ‘Tedder's Carpet’ see bombers, 2.[...]

  6. Using a bombing tactic known as the "Tedder Carpet," his forces contributed to the Allied victory at El Alamein. Taking command of Allied Air Forces in the Mediterranean (1943), he helped plan the invasion of Sicily before becoming Deputy Supreme Commander, AEF.

  7. It sets up in North Africa a tactic of radical bombing, nicknamed by the military the “Tedder carpet”, in reference to “carpet bombing”, the carpet of bombs. In April 1942, he was appointed Air Marshal and took part in the Battle of El Alamein, from October 23 to November 5, 1942.